Using gardening as a metaphor for living... This blog is how some plants & flowers, creepy things, and the dead brought me back to life.

Sunday, July 9, 2017

...a devil, a snake, a tongue-twisting hippo, and a funeral procession: American folk art at its best...

Devil Bootjack 1850-1875

Part of our Colonial Williamsburg experience was
attending the art museums. Before I mention that, Ms. Misantropia asked why I continually
write “Colonial Williamsburg” instead of simply “Williamsburg.” Having grown up
in the region, I sometimes forget to spell out exactly what I mean when writing
about places that are so familiar to me.

Colonial Williamsburg is a living-history museum that
includes recreated colonial houses, taverns, and buildings based on what the
colonial city looked like. It is filled with interpreters dressed in colonial
attire. It is a privately funded and actually came about with one of the
reverends of Bruton Parish Church working with the Rockefeller family in the
1920s.

While strolling through the town, a visitor can learn
about the historic homes, some of which are from the colonial era with others
being recreations; one can learn about the trades of the time. My fella always
says that he wants to go watch shoes be made. The coffin picture from
my last post was part of the cabinetmaker shop where you can watch
interpreters who are also experts in designing furniture using colonial era
tools and practices. Here is an interactive
map for those who are a bit more curious about the place.

Mourning ring

Colonial Williamsburg is a popular destination for school
trips; and, growing up so close to the location, I can recall several middle
school trips there and to the surrounding historical locations. The coffin
actually fits right into this discussion because while many visitors go to large
tourist spots like Colonial Williamsburg, there is always a bit of dark tourism
to be had.

This was the first time my fella and I have made a
plan to attend the Colonial
Williamsburg Art Museums. We’ve attended them before but usually do not get
very far because we have gone on the last day when it is pretty much time for
us to head home. Honestly, we had no idea how amazing the museums would be. We
thought Colonial Williamsburg was more about the outdoor museum and had no idea
what artifacts would be inside.

Catholic Funeral Procession CA. 1910 Vermont Unidentified artist

The museums are made up of a folk art museum and a decorative
arts museum. I love folk art, especially signage and outdoor fixtures. One
exhibit in the folk art museum included “Sidewalks to Rooftops: Outdoor Folk
Art” and this delighted me because there was a collection of whirligigs and
weathervanes. There was also a carousel in the middle of the exhibit.

Catholic Funeral Procession CA. 1910 Vermont Unidentified artist

When you enter the museums, you actually enter in what
once was the public hospital that treated the mentally ill.The "Public Hospital for Persons of
Insane and Disordered Minds" was the first building in North America exclusively
devoted to the treatment of those with mental illness with the first patient being
admitted on October 12, 1773. Unfortunately, it was raining when we headed to
the museums so I did not take a picture of the building but this is the very
location that I have written about in a
previous post on Patrick Henry’s wife, who ended up living in the family
basement since the hospital conditions were so poor.

When you enter the building, there is an exhibit
interpreting the mental hospital with haunting voices of past inhabitants crying
out for help. The exhibit included diary pages and doctor logs of the patients.
In another room, it included artifacts from the period associated with helping
those become well including a coffin-shaped cage where inmates patients
would be contained if they were violent.

Our American history includes some very interesting
and strange pieces.

In this post, I have included some of my favorites
from the folk art section which is much more lively than the exhibit.

The hippo record player. The video shows that when it plays, the tongue moves.